SMU Students Head to U.S.-Mexico Border to Set Up Free Clinic
Thirty students from 海角直播 (SMU) will spend a few days during their Spring Break to run a free healthcare clinic in a small town near the U.S.-Mexico border.
The March 16-18 trip marks the ninth consecutive year that SMU podiatric students have led the visit to San Ysidro, a border town between San Diego and Tijuana considered one of the busiest land border-crossing areas in the Western Hemisphere.
Most of the 150 or so patients who attend the clinic each year lack access to healthcare, said Dr. Carlos J. Correa Bernier, Director of Education and Immersions Programs at the San Ysidro Centro Romero, which hosts the event.
Here's a video from the 2015 San Ysidro trip:
The patients range from young children to elderly, and some cross the border from Mexico just to seek care, Correa Bernier said. SMU鈥檚 annual visit was often the only time residents received any healthcare treatment.
鈥淢any people feel oppressed that we don鈥檛 have services here,鈥 Correa Bernier said. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 have a clinic in the community; we don鈥檛 have a hospital in the community. Many of them don鈥檛 get any medical care throughout the year, especially the elderly. So by your school coming here with the students to San Ysidro, it鈥檚 the only opportunity that many of them will take care of the problems they鈥檙e facing.鈥
For third-year podiatry student Morgan Garcia, the opportunity to treat underserved patients in a clinical setting expands her healthcare education beyond the classroom.
鈥淚t鈥檚 great to apply what you鈥檝e learned in the classroom in the clinic,鈥 Garcia said. 鈥淭hings don鈥檛 always work as expected, so you learn more by working with real patients, with real problems. The residents there are also so grateful to see you, so it鈥檚 an added bonus to know you鈥檙e doing something that makes a real difference in people鈥檚 lives.鈥
Dallas Valerio, also a third-year podiatry student, said he hoped to continue working with underserved communities after graduation.
鈥淣o matter what I specialize in, I always want to take the time to reach out and work in underserved communities, whether they鈥檙e abroad or within our borders.鈥
Along with the 25 podiatry students, five nursing students in the Family Nurse Practitioner (FNP) program will also attend, giving SMU students an opportunity to work in an interdisciplinary professional setting, just as they will after graduation.
The SMU team also distributes donated shoes, socks and orthotic inserts. Some patients return each year and show their thanks by cooking for the SMU students and faculty clinicians.
The students are also collecting donations, hoping to reach $5,000 for supplies, airfare, and lodging expenses. To donate, click on the following link and search for the 鈥淐SPM Student Medical Mission Project鈥 option.
Link: /alumni/donate_now